Good Farming with Adam Durey
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Good Farming with Adam Durey
@GoodFarmingAdam
Regenerative, Organic, Bio-Dynamic, Syntropic - Its all Good Farming.


Groups where RED wins, most probably aren't able to cooperate to do anything productive They probably can't return the shopping cart to it's place either


GPT-5.5 just dropped TL;DR: This is another o1 / o3 moment - Shorter, more human, actual personality - Clearly pushing into personal agents (OpenClaw) - Higher info / Token density → Cheaper to reach GPT-5.4-level intelligence It codes different: - Less bloat - Cleaner, readable output Codex: - Frontier agentic coding - Backend > Claude Opus 4.6 - Give it specs and it will build it - Handles large codebases, long runs, visual iteration loops GPT-5.5 Pro: - Does 30-90 min runs cohesively like it’s nothing - Writes full docs, uses tools well - Can solve basically anything Tradeoffs: - Slower than Opus - More expensive per token - (but more efficient overall) GPT-5.5 is the new bar


If you press blue, the worst case is you die. If you press red, the worst case is you took part in an action that killed just under half of humanity. Clicking blue minimizes the worst-case moral injury. It says you’d rather die than risk contributing to the death of another.



Guys blue is obviously more moral. Sure, red is logical. But blue is more moral. Anyone who thinks in 2nd order effects should advocate for blue. Just like the people who created our high trust societies would. Red voters destroy our society.



Typical red button argument is: “I have a higher IQ than people who correctly anticipated the outcome of the poll and therefore maximised utility in that context, because I assert in a real test that can never be done the poll would go the other way!” Behavioural string theory.


get game theory mogged once again, game theory advocates. everybody lives, and now you're in copeaganda about how you're not mean and wrong


As a game theory question, it’s boring and easy. As a political question, it’s fascinating and reveals a great deal about why democracies struggle. Superficially, blue looks like the collectivist, selfless, moral answer. And as you’d expect, plenty of people not only assumed that to be true, but moralized aggressively at those who understand that’s not factually true. Anyone who picks red is guaranteed to live, including if everyone does it. It’s objectively the better and more moral choice for most and to recommend to others. Blue is a kind of stochastic suicide button.



Amazing how lots of self appointed game theory experts confidently asserting that blue is the stupid choice. But every time this poll is run blue wins. Not only is the “game theory” answer predicting the wrong outcome, its explanatory power is based on it being able to predict the right answer. So it’s doubly wrong.



@waitbutwhy Press red, and you guarantee your survival while not affecting the survival of anyone else (since 1 button press won’t meaningfully impact the outcome of 8 billion button presses). Press blue, and you gamble your life for nothing but a momentary feeling of moral superiority.



Everyone in the world has to take a private vote by pressing a red or blue button. If more than 50% of people press the blue button, everyone survives. If less than 50% of people press the blue button, only people who pressed the red button survive. Which button would you press?


Every time this poll goes viral, “blue” starts winning and it angers a lot of people who desperately want to see half of the human population dead to be correct in an argument




I think people are choosing "blue" because then they can feel noble, but in the real world, with their life on the line, they'd press red. I'd certainly press red! Just have the whole world press red, and nobody dies!










